Oxford Old English Work in Progress (WOOPIE)

borwn ink over medieval script

The runic signature of Cynewulf in The Fates of the Apostles, Vercelli Book folio 54r - public domain

Oxford Old English Work in Progress (WOOPIE)

One unexpected positive from the lockdown has been the large number of online seminars that have sprung up in the absence of the various conferences and other meetings that are the lifeblood of academic research. Linking scholars from all over the world to share research and get feedback on ongoing projects, some of these online seminars have proved surprisingly successful.

After conversations among a group of Oxford Old English scholars back in March, it was decided to set up a small, informal weekly work-in-progress group via the OMS channel on Microsoft Teams. While the initial plan was simply for an internal support group, soon speakers from other institutions were volunteering to give papers and WOOPIE was born. Within weeks numbers had sprung up to a weekly average of 40, with attendees from all parts of the globe tuning in. The seminar has proved popular with graduate students as well as academics all over the world.

So far, we have heard papers on topics ranging from contested readings and the editing of texts to recent archaeological discoveries, from the reception of heroic poetry in local guilds to an eleventh-century chronicler’s special interest in astronomy, from the interpretation of charms and riddles to the surprising role of humour in hagiography. Other presentations have explored the influence of classical and medieval Latin writing on Old English texts, as well as the copying of Latin poetry in manuscript form in early medieval England. WOOPIE continues over the summer, meeting every Monday at 4pm, with a full programme of papers until the end of September. For further details, contact francis.leneghan@ell.ox.ac.uk

Of course, we are all looking forward to getting back to face-to-face conferences and seminars once the pandemic is over. But the success of online events such as this has certainly proved an eye-opener. Perhaps in the future, more events will incorporate an online element, such as streaming a keynote lecture, opening up discussion to a much wider international audience.

 

Programme

 

(NB this is subject to change; for up-to-date information, please consult the Teams channel)

20th April: Rachel Burns, ‘A Monastic Micro-riddle in Solomon and Saturn I,

l. 89a: “prologa prim”’

27th April: Francis Leneghan, ‘Dishonouring the Dead: Beowulf and the Staffordshire Hoard’

4th May: Rafael Pascual, ‘Beowulf 501b and the Authority of Old English Poetical Manuscripts’

11th May: Marilina Cesario (QUB), ‘Natural Science in the Peterborough Chronicle’

18th May: Glenn Cahilly-Bretzin, ‘The Case of the Missing Ducks: Thematic Reshaping in the Transmission of the Anonymous Martinmas Homily’

1st June: Mark Atherton, ‘Ælfwine and the guild of thegns: another look at the second half of The Battle of Maldon

 

10th June: Caroline Batten, ‘Charms and Riddles: Moving Beyond Sound and Sense’

 

15th June: Emily Kesling (Oslo), ‘The Royal Prayerbook and Intellectual Exchange across the Channel in the Eighth Century’

 

22nd June: Richard North (UCL), ‘Queen Camilla and Grendel’s Mother’

 

29th June: Niamh Kehoe (UCC), ‘Fool Steam Ahead: the Role of Humour in the Passion of St Eustace’

6th July: Colleen Curran, ‘Poetic Form and Function in Bede’s Historia Ecclesiastica

 

13th July: Sarah Barnett, ‘Hypermetricity and Homily: An Argument for Intentional Metrical Oddity in Christ III

20th July: Tristan Major (Qatar University), ‘Ælfric and the Dissemination of Canon Law at Worcester’

 

27th July: Elisa Ramazzina (QUB), ‘Wætan bestemed, beswyled mid swates gange: Water, Blood, and Baptism in Old English Poetry’

3rd August: Helen Appleton, ‘Folk Horror: Hell in Rogation Homilies’

 

10th August: Hannah Bailey, ‘St Rumbold in the Borderland’

 

17th August (NB change of time: 12pm): Georgina Pitt (University of Western Australia), ‘The thing-power of the exquisite Alfred Jewel’

 

24th August: Matt Coker, ‘A Tragic Sound? Interpreting the tragico sono of Old English Poetry’

 

31st August: Eleni Ponirakis (Nottingham), ‘The Greeks in Old England’

 

7th September: Michael Fox (Western), tbc

14th September: Luisa Ostacchini, ‘Imposter Saints and Fraudulent Shrines in Ælfric’s Lives of Saints’

21st September: Amy Faulkner (UCL), ‘Since berofene: Loss of Life and Treasure in Exodus and Beowulf

28th September: Kazutomo Karasawa (Rikkyo Univ.), ‘Borders between the Human and the Monster Worlds in Beowulf’

 

 

Dr Francis Leneghan is Co-Director of the Oxford Medieval Studies TORCH Programme

For more medieval matters from Oxford, have a look at the website and the OMS blog